SERIOUSLY IMMERSE WITH 3D AND VR
Creating Lifelike Environments With 3D Software
If the focus and goal today is on culture and in particular, building a culture of learning, don’t the learning experiences we are offering
have to get people excited about that ‘learning’?
I am working on a project called Cultural Awareness in Military Operations (C.A.M.O). A virtual reality 3D training course
that helps a squad locate insurgents through tactful collaboration with the local Pashtun tribe.
Pipeline for Developing a Teaser
My training will include several media deliverables starting with this C.A.M.O teaser as the initial point of contact with the learner.
Video is one among many other formats you may use. Here is a quick workflow to develop a video teaser:
Collate Slides:
A good start is collecting the best of your
course slides, and then styling them
into an outer envelope teaser.
Write Tasty Shorts:
Write creative copy that ties to your course
content using thought-provoking and curious
scenario questions, statements, or dilemmas.
Call to Action:
Close with high anticipation so that the learner asks:
“What does this mean? What’s going on here?
I need to find out more.”
How I Push creative boundaries with tools
The learning journey begins with anticipation, something neglected by many instructional designers yet such an important emotion. It leads to learner engagement, response clicks, calls, visits, and email inquiries. To get you started, I have compiled a few external resource links where you can download and use some free or subscription based assets for your teaser project.
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